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Bsod

Hey, So last night I cracked my laptops screen which has forced me to go back to my old laptop while the new one is in for repairs. The issue with that is if I run the laptop in normal mode it BSOD's every 15-20 minutes for no apparent reason. I took it in to a pc repair guy in march and he said to not bother with it and just get a new one. I did that but have now been forced back to this one because of the aforementioned broken screen. This laptop is an HP G60-553NR. I'm wondering if you guys/gals can do anything or if i'm just computer less until my screen is repaired?

I'm sorry about the delay here. I'm moving this topic to the Windows 7 forum since there really is no evidence at this point of what is causing the BSODs. If it is determined that malware is indeed the problem, we can move the topic back.

I'm going to alert the folks that deal in BSODs to your topic so you can get assistance.

In the meantime, I'm going to ask some questions to hopefully narrow down the cause of the BSODs.

Do you recall what you did or what happened prior to the time that the computer started to BSOD? Install new software? Other problems with the computer?

Second, we need to stop the automatic restart when the computer BSODs so you can write down the codes. That will help identify the cause of the BSOD.

Right click on My Computer and click on Properties.

On the System Properties Screen, click on Advanced system settings. You should be on the Advanced tab. If not, click on the Advanced tab. Then click on the Settings Button under Startup and Recovery. Now remove the check mark by Automatically restart under System Failure.

Next time the computer BSOD's, write down the codes that show. There will be three long strings of numbers and letters, those are the numbers we need to see.

Orange Blossom

Help us help you. If HelpBot replies, you MUST follow step 1 in its reply so we know you need help.

Download BlueScreenView:http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/blue_screen_view.html
unzip downloaded file and double click on BlueScreenView.exe to run the program.
when scanning is done, go to EDIT - Select All
Go to FILE - SAVE Selected Items, and save the report as BSOD.txt
Open BSOD.txt in Notepad, copy all of the content, and paste it into your next reply

Download BlueScreenView:http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/blue_screen_view.htmlunzip downloaded file and double click on BlueScreenView.exe to run the program.when scanning is done, go to EDIT - Select AllGo to FILE - SAVE Selected Items, and save the report as BSOD.txtOpen BSOD.txt in Notepad, copy all of the content, and paste it into your next reply

That log shows no bsod's recently other than two in July. Some of the errors in the past were caused by your network card driver, at least one by the keyboard driver - but the errors are all over the place and could be anything from bad ram to a bad hd to a bad mobo to a corrupt Windows Installation. Again, since there are no recent bsod's listed it's hard to tell what the current problem is.

Open the Setup Utility by turning on or restarting the computer. While the "Press the ESC key for Startup Menu" message is displayed in the lower-left corner of the screen, press ESC.

When the Startup Menu is displayed, press F10.

Select Diagnostics Menu.

Run a Primary Hard Drive Test followed by a Memory Test. Note any errors.

2 ) Update Network Drivers:After checking Device Manager for your specific wireless and LAN cards and driver version, go to HP Software & Driver Download and see if there is a more current driver for both cards.